Gaoliang Wenxiu
Gaoliang Wenxiu is a Chinese idiom, pronounced g ā Oli á NGW é nxi ù, which refers to the luxurious life of rich people. It also refers to fine and valuable things.
allusion
It comes from the Warring States period. Mencius · Gaozi Shang written by Mencius Ke: "the poem says:" drunk with wine, full with virtue. " The speech is full of benevolence and righteousness, so it is not the taste of the original person's Gao Liang; the reputation is given to the body, so it is not the taste of the original person's Wen Xiu. " Zhao Qi notes: "Gaoliang, fine Liang, such as paste also; Wenxiu, embroider clothes also.".
explain
The luxurious life of a wealthy family. It also refers to fine and valuable things. Gao Liang: fat meat and fine grain, refers to delicious food. Wenxiu: embroidered silk fabrics or clothes. It means delicious food and fancy clothes.
Discrimination of words
Although my nephew is young, I don't know what the article is, but when I read it carefully, it's a hundred times more popular than it is. A dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : gāo liáng wén xiù
Gaoliang Wenxiu
White teeth and green eyebrows. bái chǐ qīng méi
Birds in terror and mice in flight. niǎo hài shǔ cuàn
the drunken singing and the usual dancing. hān gē zuì wǔ
come down in one continuous line. yī mài xiāng chéng